* Unilever (LSE: ULVR.L - news) says momentum to continue into Q4 and 2010
* Unilever Q3 sales volumes up 3.6 pct, consensus 2.8 pct
* Says well on track to restore volume growth
(Adds finance director comments, analyst, shares)
LONDON, Nov 5 (Reuters) - Consumer goods giant Unilever beat forecasts with a 3.6 percent rise in third-quarter underlying volume sales and pledged its turnaround under Chief Executive Paul Polman's will continue into the fourth quarter and 2010.
Polman's second successive quarter of volume growth came as he spends more on marketing and cuts selective prices to drive growth in the current downturn, and he is being helped by falling prices for commodities like edible oils and packaging.
Anglo-Dutch Unilever Plc/NV , the world's third-biggest food and consumer goods group, said all regions and categories showed growth while it was on track to restore volume growth for 2009, without hitting margins or cash flow.
"We expect volume growth in the fourth quarter and we don't see anything to slow up our underlying momentum," said Finance Director Jim Lawrence at a quarterly results briefing.
He added conditions for the maker of Ben & Jerry's ice cream, Knorr soup and Dove soap remained challenging with world unemployment still rising and consumer confidence low, but he said it sells affordable products to a range of consumers.
"A good third-quarter for volumes, margins and cash flow. The results provide further evidence of Unilever's improved performance," said Panmure Gordon analyst Graham Jones.
Unilever Plc shares dipped 0.7 percent to 18.17 pounds by 0815 GMT in a UK market off 1 Percent, after outperforming the DJ European Food and Beverage index by 3 percent this year.
The quarterly 3.6 percent volume rise beat the consensus forecast for a 2.8 percent rise in a survey of 12 analysts by Reuters, while underlying sales in July-September rose 3.4 percent compared with the consensus of 3 percent.
Lawrence said volumes were boosted by 0.5 percentage points due to an extra trading day in Western Europe and a systems change in Canada which would unwind in the fourth quarter.
Quarterly sales were buoyed by strong European ice cream sales and emerging market growth, as underlying profit margins rose despite a rise in advertising and promotion spend.
Polman, who took over in January, having previously worked at larger rivals Procter & Gamble and Nestle (4707.KL - news) has targeting reigniting volume growth after the group relied on price rises for all its sales increase in its first-quarter.
Unilever's volume rise beat the 2 percent seen at the world's largest food group Nestle in its third-quarter, while France's Danone (Paris: FR0000120644 - news) saw a big 7.1 percent leap in its sales volumes due largely to big cuts in its yoghurt prices. (For a graphic showing global consumer staples valuations see: http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/119/EZ_ULVR1109.gif)
Unilever, whose 400 brands include Hellmann's mayonnaise, Omo detergent and Sunsilk shampoo, posted underlying quarterly earnings of 0.43 euros per share, beating a consensus forecast of 0.38 euros collated by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
The half-year dividend was set at 0.2695 euros a share. (Reporting by David Jones, editing by Will Waterman and Hans Peters)
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